11
Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC.

Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    2

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

Lisa Thompson

S C H O L A S T I C I N C .

480952_FM_v1.indd iii480952_FM_v1.indd iii 1/18/17 12:26 PM1/18/17 12:26 PM

Page 2: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

For Mum and Lynne

If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

Copyright © 2017 by Lisa Thompson

This book was originally published in hardcover by Scholastic Press in 2017.

All rights reserved. Published by Scholastic Inc., Publishers since 1920. SCHOLASTIC and associated logos are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of Scholastic Inc.

The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission of the publisher. For information regarding permission, write to Scholastic Inc., Attention: Permissions Department, 557 Broadway, New York, NY 10012.

This book is a work of fi ction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fi ctitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

ISBN 978-1-338-05393-7

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 18 19 20 21 22

Printed in the U.S.A. 40This edition first printing 2018

Book design by Christopher Stengel

518330_FM_v1.indd iv518330_FM_v1.indd iv 6/4/18 3:27 PM6/4/18 3:27 PM

Page 3: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

1

CHAPTER ONE

The Arrival

Mr. Charles had sunburn right on the top of his head.

I saw it while he was inspecting his roses. He studied each

flower, giving the larger ones a little shake to see if any petals fell

off as he edged along the pathway. The big, bald patch on his head

was now a bright red, shiny circle surrounded by white, fluffy hair.

He should have been wearing a hat in this heat, but I guess it’s hard

to notice if the top of your head is burning when you’re busy doing

things.

I noticed though.

I noticed a lot of things from the window.

It’s not like I was doing anything wrong. I was just watching

my neighbors to pass the time, that’s all; it’s not like I was being

nosey. And I didn’t think the neighbors minded. Occasionally Jake

Bishop from number five would shout things up at me—things

like weirdo, freak, or nutter. It had been a long time since he’d actu-

ally called me Matthew—but then, he was an idiot, so I didn’t really

care what he said.

I lived on a quiet, dead-end street in a town full of people who

said how great it was that they didn’t live in that big, smelly city of

London—and who then spent most of their mornings desperately

trying to get there.

480952_Text_v1.indd 1480952_Text_v1.indd 1 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM

Page 4: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

2

There were seven houses in our little cul-de-sac. Six of them

looked the same, with square bay windows, front doors with frosted

glass panels, and whitewashed walls. But the seventh house, stuck

between number three and number five, was very different. Built

from blood-red bricks, the Rectory looked like a guest at a Halloween

party where no one else had bothered to dress up. Its front door was

black, with two triangular windows at the top that were covered

from the inside with some old cardboard. Whether it had been put

there to stop the drafts or to stop anyone from peering in, who knew?

Dad told me a developer had tried to flatten the Rectory

twenty years before when our houses were being built, but it dug

its hundred-year-old foundations in and somehow managed to

stay, like a rotten, old tooth. The vicar’s widow, Old Nina, still

lived there, but I rarely saw her. There was a lamp in the front room

window that she left on day and night: a glowing orange ball

behind the gray curtains. Mum said she kept a low profile because

she was frightened that someone from the church was going to

make her move out, since with her husband dead, it wasn’t really

her house anymore. On her front step she had three pots of flowers

that she watered every morning at ten o’clock.

I watched her and the other neighbors from the spare room at

the front of the house. It wasn’t quite as perfect as my bedroom,

but I liked it in there. The lemon walls were still shiny-clean and it

had that freshly decorated feel, even though it had been five years

since it had happened. Mum and Dad called this room the office

9:30 a.m.—

480952_Text_v1.indd 2480952_Text_v1.indd 2 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM

Page 5: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

3

since we kept the computer in there, but we all really knew it as the

nursery. Hanging in a corner there was a baby’s crib mobile made

of six padded, stripy elephants, which dangled pointlessly over a

tower of unopened boxes and shopping bags. Mum had put the

mobile up as soon as she’d gotten home from her shopping mara-

thon, even though Dad had said it was unlucky.

“Don’t be silly, Brian. We need to make sure it works, don’t we?”

She had wound the little key at the top and we’d all watched

as the elephants twirled around and around to “Twinkle, Twinkle,

Little Star.” When the music had stopped I’d clapped—I was only

seven then, and you do silly stuff like that when you’re that age.

Mum said she’d unpack the rest of the shopping another time, but

she never did. The bags are still where she left them: diapers, bot-

tles, a sterilizer, a monitor, tiny vests. Everything my baby brother

would have needed if I hadn’t . . . Well, if he were alive.

The office had a window that looked out onto the street, and

I saw my neighbors begin their day:

9:30 a.m.—9:30 a.m.—Mr. Charles is deadheading his roses again. He’s using some new clippers with red handles. The top of his head looks sore with sunburn.

Mr. Charles could have been anything from sixty-five to

ninety-five years old. He never seemed to get older. I figured he’d

found an age he quite liked and just stopped right there.

480952_Text_v1.indd 3480952_Text_v1.indd 3 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM

Page 6: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

4

9:36 a.m.—9:36 a.m.—Gordon and Penny Sullivan appear from number one. Gordon gets into their car as Penny waves to Mr. Charles from across the street.

Mr. Charles waved back and twirled his garden clippers on

his finger like a cowboy, then snipped at the air three times, the

silver blades glinting in the sunlight. Penny laughed. Her eyes

squinted and she put her hand up to shade them, but then her face

dropped. She’d spotted something: me. Mr. Charles followed her

gaze and they both stared up at me, watching them from my win-

dow. I quickly stepped away and vanished from view, my heart

thumping. I waited until I heard Gordon’s car reverse out of the

driveway and then looked out on the street again.

9:42 a.m.—9:42 a.m.—Penny and Gordon leave to do their weekly supermarket shopping.

9:44 a.m.—9:44 a.m.—Melody Bird appears from number three dragging their dachshund, Frankie, behind her.

It was the weekend, which meant it was Melody’s turn to

walk their dog. Her mum, Claudia, took him out during the week,

but I didn’t know why they bothered—he never seemed happy

about it, and he spent the length of our road trying to turn back.

Melody picked at the wool on the sleeve of her black cardigan as

she walked along, stopping every three steps for the little dog to

9:50 a.m.—

480952_Text_v1.indd 4480952_Text_v1.indd 4 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM

Page 7: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

9:36 a.m.—

9:42 a.m.—

9:44 a.m.—

5

catch up with her. She practically lived in that black cardigan, even

though it was about a hundred degrees out there. They stopped at

a lamppost while Frankie had a sniff before digging his paws in

and trying to get home, but Melody dragged him onward, and they

disappeared down the alleyway that led to the graveyard at the

back of the Rectory.

9:50 a.m.—9:50 a.m.—The door to number seven opens and the “newlyweds” appear.

Mr. Jenkins and his wife, Hannah, lived next door on the side

we’re not attached to. People called them the “newlyweds” even

though they’d been married for nearly four years now. Hannah

was always smiling, even when she didn’t realize someone was

watching her.

“I’m not sure it’s good for you to run in this heat, Rory,” she

said, grinning away.

Mr. Jenkins ignored her as he reached his arm up high and

stretched over to one side. He taught PE at my school, and in his

opinion, anyone who didn’t exercise regularly really had no reason

to even exist. I tried my best to keep off his radar.

He lunged along their driveway in a tight white top and blue

shorts, his hands on his hips.

“Don’t be too long,” Hannah said. “We’ve still got to decide

on a car seat, remember?”

Mr. Jenkins grunted at her.

480952_Text_v1.indd 5480952_Text_v1.indd 5 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM

Page 8: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

6

I looked down at the step and flinched when I saw her large,

pregnant stomach. She rested her hand on top, patting herself rhyth-

mically, and then she turned and disappeared into the house. I let go

of a breath I’d been holding.

Mr. Jenkins set off toward High Street, waving at Mr. Charles,

who was too busy with his flowers to notice. He studied each rose

as they bobbed in the breeze like tight bundles of pink cotton

candy on a fairground stall. Any that weren’t up to scratch he

snipped off and dropped into a plastic pot. When he was finished

he walked back around the side of the house carrying the pot of

dead roses.

10:00 a.m.—10:00 a.m.—No sign of Old Nina watering her pots.

It was no surprise I hadn’t seen her yet, considering how busy

the close had been so far this morning.

The door of number five opened and a boy my age appeared.

He walked down his driveway and looked in one direction only.

Straight at me. This time I didn’t duck away but stood my ground

and stared back. Stopping in front of our house, he tipped his head

back and made a grotesque, gagging noise before launching a great

lump of phlegm onto our path. I gave him a slow handclap through

the window, ignoring how sick I felt. He frowned when he saw my

hands, and I quickly put them behind me. Giving our wall a good

kicking, he turned and headed off down the street.

10:03 a.m.—

10:40 a.m.—

480952_Text_v1.indd 6480952_Text_v1.indd 6 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM

Page 9: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

10:00 a.m.—

7

10:03 a.m.—10:03 a.m.—Jake Bishop—still an idiot.

Once Jake had gone there wasn’t much to see. Mr. Jenkins

returned from his run, his white T-shirt dark with sweat. Penny

and Gordon Sullivan unloaded eleven shopping bags from their

trunk. Melody returned from her walk holding Frankie under one

arm; the dog looked rather pleased with himself.

And then the cul-de-sac was still.

Until the Rectory door slowly opened.

10:40 a.m.—10:40 a.m.—Old Nina is on her step looking very nervous. She has her little silver watering can in one hand.

The elderly lady was dressed in a black skirt, cream blouse, and

peach cardigan. She trickled water into each pot for a count of five

before moving on to the next one. As she did this her eyes flickered

around the neighborhood. She’d just begun to water the final pot

when a car turned onto the street. Leaving the watering can on the step

she slipped back inside, slamming her heavy front door behind her.

The car driving slowly down the road was one of those that Dad

would say costs “a small mortgage.” It certainly didn’t belong to any of

the neighbors. It was so shiny our houses were reflected in its black

doors as it circled the cul-de-sac, coming to a stop outside number

eleven. I grabbed my notebook as I watched, waiting for the doors

to open.

480952_Text_v1.indd 7480952_Text_v1.indd 7 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM

Page 10: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

8

10:45 a.m.—10:45 a.m.—There is a really posh black car on the close. I’ve never seen it before and it’s parked right next door! Does Mr. Charles have a visitor?

I knew my neighbors’ schedules inside and out; they didn’t

surprise me much. But this was something new. I tried to see inside

the car, but it had heavily tinted windows so I couldn’t make any-

thing out. It hummed quietly for a while and then the engine was

turned off. The driver’s door opened.

A woman, wearing sunglasses that were so big they covered

most of her face, got out and looked around the cul-de-sac. She

brushed her hair from her face and then slammed the door shut.

Mr. Charles appeared and walked quickly down his path, wiping

his hands on the front of his shirt.

“Darling!” he said, stretching his tanned arms toward her.

“Hello, Dad.”

She held him at a distance and turned her cheek for him

to kiss, then she went to the car and opened the back door. A

small girl of around six or seven climbed out carrying a porce-

lain doll. I stood closer to the window but could only catch a few

words.

“. . . must be Casey! And who’s this? Is she coming to stay?”

Mr. Charles went to stroke the doll’s hair, but the girl twisted

around so it was out of reach. It looked like something from an

antique shop, not a kid’s toy. The woman in the big sunglasses

emerged from the backseat of the car with a blond-haired boy who

480952_Text_v1.indd 8480952_Text_v1.indd 8 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM

Page 11: Lisa Thompson - Scholastic · 2018. 8. 21. · Lisa Thompson SCHOLASTIC INC. 4480952_FM_v1.indd iii80952_FM_v1.indd iii 11/18/17 12:26 PM/18/17 12:26 PM. For Mum and Lynne If you

10:45 a.m.—

9

she plonked down on the pavement. Mr. Charles held his hand out

to the toddler.

“Pleased to meet you, Teddy. I’m your granddad.”

The boy cuddled a pale blue blanket, rubbing a corner against

his cheek as he stared at the crinkly hand reaching toward him.

The hand dangled there awkwardly between them, and then Mr.

Charles gave up and went to help his daughter with the luggage.

They talked for a while, but their backs were to me so I couldn’t

hear what they were saying.

The woman put two black suitcases by the gate and then held

each child’s face in her hands, saying something before giving

them each a quick kiss on the forehead. Squeezing Mr. Charles

on the arm, she got back into the car. The engine purred to life and

the dark, shiny car drove slowly to the end of the road. The three

of them stood there watching until it was out of sight.

“Right! Let’s get you two inside, shall we?”

Mr. Charles flapped his arms at the kids and herded them like

sheep toward the house, his face a mad grin. The little boy stopped,

still rubbing the blanket to his cheek as he reached for one of the

roses next to the pathway.

“Ah, ah, ah, no touching!” said his grandfather and he waved

his arms again, steering them in through the front door.

A minute later he was back, dragging the two black suitcases

behind him. He glanced up at me and I quickly stepped away, but

not before noticing his wide smile had vanished.

480952_Text_v1.indd 9480952_Text_v1.indd 9 1/18/17 10:10 AM1/18/17 10:10 AM